Making Ideas Beautiful

Do art and ideas mix? It depends on who's stirring the pot

By
Terry Teachout

Updated Dec. 10, 2005 12:01 am ET

NEW YORK -- Sometimes a heartfelt compliment can blow up in the recipient's face, as when T.S. Eliot said of Henry James that he had "a mind so fine that no idea could violate it," thus making him sound like a plot-spinning idiot savant. What Eliot really meant was that James understood how an artist who dabbles in ideas can lose sight of the true purpose of art, which is (as Renoir said) to "make everything more beautiful." You can't paint a picture of E = mc2, or compose a symphony about the law of supply and demand. Nevertheless, art is so effective at swaying men's minds that there have always been...